A reversible filling-emptying process could be performed successfully within this work. This highlights the potential of CNTs for applications in the field of drug delivery.
Ferromagnetic-filled carbon nanotubes are new nanostructured materials with many possible applications. They can be synthesized using the thermal decomposition of metallocenes of the iron triad. Two different methods (solid and liquid source CVD) are suitable for producing, at very high filling rates, filled nanotubes on precoated Si substrates. The diameters of deposited filled nanotubes are particularly dependent on the size of catalyst particles on the substrate, while the lengths depend more on the sublimation and decomposition rate of metallocene. The growth mechanism of filled carbon nanotubes is based on the root growth mode. Multiwalled carbon nanotubes, filled with body-centered cubic Fe, show unusual magnetic properties. Aligned-growth nanotube ensembles can reach coercivities up to 130 mT (bulk iron 0.09 mT). Ferromagnetic-filled carbon nanotubes can be successfully used both as cantilever tips in magnetic force microscopy and as a nanocontainer for new therapies in medicine.
By optimization of the synthesis of ferromagnetic-filled carbon nanotube ensembles on Si substrates (catalytic decomposition of ferrocene) and following annealing at 645°C, marked hysteresis loops can be measured by the alternating-gradient method. Unusually high coercivities and strong anisotropies with an easy magnetic axis parallel to the alignment of the nanotubes are observed from the as-grown samples, whereas an enhanced magnetic saturation moment (up to a factor of 2) and a decreased anisotropy are realized after annealing at 645°C. The increase of the magnetic saturation moment of the Fe-filled carbon nanotube ensembles is caused by the entire transformation within the tubes of the γ-Fe and Fe3C phases to ferromagnetic α-Fe and graphite. X-ray diffraction with different glancing incidence shows that the γ-Fe is predominantly at the tips of the nanotubes, while the iron carbide resides closer to the substrate. However, after the annealing process only α-Fe is found. At an annealing temperature of 675°C the nanotube structures are destroyed and the magnetic characteristics are dramatically altered (viz., the disappearance of anisotropy and reduction in coercivity).
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.